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Description

Mustered in darkness and marched to the threshold of Erebor by secret ways, Azog the Defiler’s great host spills from the earth to lay siege to the mountain kingdom of the Dwarves and the city of Dale. Bolstered by Trolls, Ogres and Goblin mercenaries, the main body of the army of Dol Guldur is composed of Orc soldiers. Tall, long-limbed, and broad-shouldered, these are no ordinary, bent-backed, stunted Orcs, but a more disciplined and dangerous breed, like Azog himself. Despite the pain a bright sky inflicts upon their pale, night eyes, the Orc soldiers of Dol Guldur fight on in daylight, driven by the promises of carnage, ruin, and feasts of man-flesh. Falling upon the defenders of the Mountain, their ordered ranks shatter into slavering mobs as the soldiers surrender to their bloodlust. They run through Dale’s streets and prowl the battlefield before the Gate of Erebor, roaring with savage delight at the destruction they bring, cruel blades gripped tightly in armoured fists and dripping with blood and gore. The Dol Guldur Orc Soldier is the latest addition to Weta Workshop’s high-quality 1:6 scale Middle-earth line; a line that is made by the very same artists and technicians who work on our movies. CREATING THE DOL GULDUR ORC SOLDIER Eleven years after The Lord of the Rings exploded onto darkened cinema screens around the world, director Peter Jackson returned to the work of J.R.R. Tolkien in The Hobbit, bringing this beloved story to life in an epic trilogy. Weta Workshop was thrilled to return to Middle-earth once again, utilising the processes developed on LOTR to provide design, specialty props and costumes, prosthetics, armour, creatures, characters, and weapons to all three films. The Hobbit would be just as Orc-heavy as its predecessor; the creatures a seamless mix of visual effects and performers in prosthetics. Weta Workshop designed a series of Orcs to be digitally brought to life, and fabricated physical makeup appliances from foam latex. Working from a palette of blues, reds, purples, yellows, and greys, the Workshop paint team played with skin patterns, adding birthmarks and scars. Distilling this creativity into a collectible version: Jamie Beswarick, part of Weta Workshop’s original sculpting team on The Lord of the Rings.